
Attractions in the Jamestown area invite you to treat yourself, your family, and your friends to the annual Doors Open Jamestown, a FREE day at your local museums!
History, art, nature and comedy – all are open for you. Local restaurants and retail shops will also be offering discounts – spend the day discovering Jamestown! Nearly a dozen local attractions are participating this year, and dozens of restaurants and retail stores will also be open for your shopping and dining pleasure. Enter to win prizes, too!
The event is organized by Chautauqua County Chamber of Commerce and the participating attractions and merchants.
No registration. No form. Just come on by and see us on Saturday, January 24.
The Robert H. Jackson Center is a non-profit, non-partisan educational organization that is dedicated to presenting accurate and balanced information about complex issues. The opinions expressed by various guest speakers, panelists, and authors do not necessarily reflect the views of the Center, its Board, and supporters.
The Center fulfills its educational mission by welcoming diverse views and by providing a forum to explore a wide range of perspectives on often controversial legal and public policy issues. While we make an effort to ensure the information we provide is accurate and balanced, we welcome your comments, suggestions, or correction of any factual errors.
Since 2001, the Robert H. Jackson Center has preserved the values embodied in the life and works of Robert H. Jackson, who served as U.S. Solicitor General, U.S. Attorney General, U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and Chief U.S. Prosecutor of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. Through programs, presentations, exhibits, media, internships, and scholarship, the Center seeks to demonstrate to current and future generations the relevance and applicability of Justice Jackson’s ideas and writings. The Center provides educational content on the United States Constitution and Supreme Court, civil rights, the legacy of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg and international human rights, and the rule of law. During his illustrious career, Justice Jackson addressed these subjects, and the Center recognizes his thinking remains relevant today.